Cisco leads intent-based networking over the competition

It’s not surprising that networks are getting bigger, more business critical and more challenging to operate, especially when considering the impact of cloud, mobility, artificial intelligence (AI), and the Internet of Things (IoT).

The consequence? Traditional ways of designing, deploying and managing enterprise networks are not sustainable. And yet network owners must provision and modify such massive networks – while segmenting various users, groups, applications, and IoT devices – without compromising security and application performance.

Intent-based networking addresses these challenges through end-to-end network policy translation, automation, and assurance. But how do vendor implementations compare?

HPE-Aruba’s and Huawei’s automation solutions are rudimentary and fragmented for different elements of the network (switching, wireless, users, devices etc.). They both require multiple touchpoints and are based on rigid templates rather than modern, guided workflows based on context.

Policy-based segmentation:how well can the network be segmented for diverse users and devices, while maintaining security?

Miercom found out that only Cisco offers ease of policy creation and deployment with micro and macro segmentation using a simple drag-and-drop mechanism. HPE and Huawei fail to offer multi-level segmentation and still rely on traditional access-control-list (ACL)-based network segmentation – which adds complexity and additional operational cost.

Network assurance:how can network problems be addressed with guided features, such as monitoring, troubleshooting and remediation?

Miercom found that only Cisco provides a unified assurance platform for wired, wireless and routing with predictive troubleshooting, faster remediation and unique features, such as Intelligent Capture and analytics for Apple devices.

Vendors such as HPE-Aruba and Huawei offer silos of various assurance platforms, but their respective lack of integration across network deployment, management, monitoring and troubleshooting functions forces the network administrator to use multiple dashboards and tools.
Only Cisco delivers all integrated elements required for a complete intent-based networking offering.

Conclusion

For comprehensive analysis of how Cisco DNA stacks up against the competition on intent-based networking, download complete Miercom report here.

Look out for more blogs in this series, which will take a deep-dive into:

network automation

policy-based segmentation

network assurance

About Miercom

Miercom is an independent third-party testing and certification company.